National Post (National Edition)

Wal-Mart, Google team up in effort to catch Amazon

Voice-based shopping arrives in September

- MATTHEW BOYLE AND SPENCER SOPER Bloomberg News

NEW YORK •

is teaming up with Google to let shoppers order by voice, the latest example of the world’s largest retailer finding a technology partner to catch e-commerce leader Amazon.com Inc.

By the end of September, Wal-Mart customers can link their store accounts to Google’s Express shopping service and use voice-activated Google Home speakers to buy hundreds of thousands of items for delivery. Shopping recommenda­tions will be based on previous purchases.

Beginning next year, the assortment will expand to include fresh groceries and allow for in-store pickup of orders.

The collaborat­ion is Wal-Mart’s latest attempt to match the convenienc­e of Amazon, which quickly delivers a bigger online selection and has a dominant line of voice-activated Echo speakers that play music, turn on air conditione­rs and handle shopping orders. Wal-Mart is teaming up with Google to keep its customers from moving to Amazon through these devices.

For Google, the partnershi­p is a boost for its Express shopping app and website, which have also struggled to compete with Amazon. Google is dropping its membership fee for the service. It previously charged US$10 a month or $95 per year. The purchase histories of WalMart shoppers will help Google make personaliz­ed recommenda­tions, a key feature needed to make voiceactiv­ated shopping convenient.

“We’ve got the purchase history of 140 million Americans going into brick and mortar stores,” said Marc Lore, head of U.S. e-commerce for Wal-Mart who joined through the retailer’s 2016 acquisitio­n of his Jet. com startup. “We are building this to extend to fresh and frozen food. We will deliver to homes and expand aggressive­ly.”

More than 35 million Americans will speak to internet-connected devices at least once a month this year, more than double the number in 2016, according to a May report from research firm EMarketer Inc. About 71 per cent will use Echo devices, with the Google Home speaker trailing at 24 per cent.

Wal-Mart and Google say the partnershi­p will be particular­ly compelling for replenishi­ng common household supplies like paper towels, laundry detergent and breakfast cereal. With a Google Home speaker in a kitchen linked to a Wal-Mart account, shoppers can order peanut butter and olive oil to restock pantries when the need is top of mind and they may not have a smartphone handy. Having data on WalMart shoppers’ purchase histories will mean Google’s digital assistant won’t have to ask for specific brands, weights or sizes, it will just re-order based on past preference­s.

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